Who Needs Friends?

David Fincher commented on Mark Zuckerberg's status with 'The Social Network'

The Social Network is a wonderful title, at once Olympian in its detachment and self-descriptive in its buzz. Everyone will opine (and Tweet) on this Scott Rudin-produced, Aaron Sorkin-scripted, David Fincher-directed, universally anticipated tale of Facebook’s genesis and founding genius—at least until something sexier comes along.

The main talking point is the movie’s unlovable protagonist. As written by Sorkin and played by Jesse Eisenberg, Facebook mogul Mark Zuckerberg is a character far more compelling than his story. Insensitive, paranoid, humorless and implacably driven, Zuckerberg may not be the year’s most irritatingly arrogant cine sad sack, but he is the most formidable—however grandiose, neither Ben Stiller’s Greenberg nor Ron Bronstein’s Daddy Longlegs became a billionaire at age 25.

A sort of mildly autistic Sammy Glick with a grim 1,000-yard glare, Eisenberg plays Zuckerberg as the dog in the manger, keeping the audience at arm’s length while ferociously guarding his screen space against all comers. The first thing we learn about the ungainly Harvard sophomore, yammering away at his date (Rooney Mara) while hunched over a table in a crowded Boston bar, is that he scored a perfect 1600 on his SATs. The next thing is that he’s obsessed with gaining entrance into one of Harvard’s ultra-exclusive final clubs.

Merrick Morton

Defriends

This pre-credit scene ends with Zuckerberg driving the fresh-faced co-ed to break up with him then and there. “You’re going to be successful and rich,” she says. “But you’re going to go through life thinking that girls don’t like you because you’re a tech geek. I want you to know, from the bottom of my heart, that won’t be true. It’ll be because you’re an asshole.” Her name is “Erica,” but in the context of The Social Network, it should be “Rosebud.” Wounded, Zuckerberg retreats to his dorm room and, after insulting the girl personally on his blog, avenges himself on her gender by instantly (and drunkenly) devising a website to rate all Harvard women by hotness. The site draws so much traffic from his fellow students (visualized in party-down mode as Zuck programs) it crashes the Harvard computer system.

Erica is not impressed. But others are, notably a supercilious pair of upper-class upperclassmen, the Winklevoss twins (both played by Armie Hammer). The golden boys invite Zuckerberg into the foyer of their finalist of final clubs and enlist him in their scheme to create a Harvard-only version of then-reigning social network sites such as MySpace and Friendster (“Girls want to go with guys who go to Harvard”); outsider Zuck appreciates the appeal of Crimson exclusivity and, funded by his dorm-mate Eduardo Saverin (Andrew Garfield), runs with it. Facebook is born.

The Social Network’s first act is its best—a hellishly precise youth movie rattling along on a clamor of computer jargon. Applying a Zodiac-level love of detail and subtly expressionist lighting to another sort of petri dish, Fincher produces a rich, gaseous atmosphere. His Harvard is at once cold and cozy, electric with possibility and oppressively organized according to arcane internal castes. Suffering through “Caribbean Night” at his déclassé Jewish frat, Zuckerberg tells Saverin that they’re taking “the entire social experience of college online.” Facebook.com will be a virtual final club, with them as presidents.

Difficult not to root for this graceless parvenu to overturn the system, especially since the self-entitled Winklevoss lads make even Harvard’s then-president, the execrable Larry Summers (played to the hilt by Rush Limbaugh fill-in Douglas Urbanski), look good; it’s additionally enjoyable to see Zuck blithely confound a succession of high-powered lawyers once the bamboozled Winklevosses file suit. But here, the narrative stumbles. Saverin eventually sued Zuckerberg as well, and drawing on Ben Mezrich’s novelistic history The Accidental Billionaires, itself largely dependent on Saverin’s story, Sorkin flashes forward to the discovery processes of both suits. The depositions prompt a succession of clumsy chronological, legally approved flashbacks: Zuckerberg leaves Harvard for New York, and then, under the Mephistophelean influence of Napster co-founder Sean Parker (Justin Timberlake), Palo Alto. It’s there that Zuckerberg takes Facebook galactic—half-a-billion users and potential movie-ticket buyers—but once the charismatic Parker appears, Fincher and Sorkin cede the film to him, along with his patsy, the pathetically duped Saverin. (“I was your only friend,” he whines, as the silent Zuckerberg scrunches further into his private void.)

While Zuckerberg grows increasingly enigmatic, Parker gets to make the flashy pronouncements—“Private life is a relic of a bygone time. . . . Now we’re going to live on the Internet”—and is even credited with giving Zuckerberg the idea for his notorious business card (“I’m CEO . . . bitch”). Parker confesses that, back when he was a high-school hacker, he invented Napster to impress a girl—but it’s asserted throughout the film that Zuckerberg is driven by something more than a desire for money or sex or even a monstrous sense of spite. He thinks he wants to be cool, but like everyone else, he just wants to be loved (though he doesn’t know it). Corny as that is, the film’s nadir comes when Zuckerberg’s pretty young lawyer comforts him (or us) with the mealy-mouthed observation, “You’re not an asshole, Mark. You’re just trying so hard to be one.”